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Ajisen Ramen

In the dying hours of 2006 I found myself 1) in North York, 2) in a car with three drunk friends, one hungry driver and, of course, my camera, and 3) blinking at an indiglo watch, wondering if 1:30AM meant we were going to eat at a Coffee Time.

All of a sudden, Dharm (the driver) starts raving about this noodle place his friend took him too... How it's amazingly good, they've got locations all over the world and how it's going to sweep the city. "I can't remember the name," he says, "but it's something Ramen. It's coming up."

We all agree that it's probably closed anyways, but keep heading towards the location anyhow. As we pass Ajisen Ramen, the drunkest of the drunks points and screams, "THERE! IT'S OPEN!!!!" and before I can look over, Dharm sends us screeching into a u-turn on this quiet stretch of Yonge St.

Thankfully, it was well worth the whiplash.

Walking up to Ajisen, I was feeling a little sleepy, but one foot in the door and I was shocked right back into consciousness. The hot-pink furniture, bright lights, mural and giant winking 'doll' could startle you out of a coma. Not that it really came off too over-the-top or tacky at all. It was great!

We were seated in a comfy booth, brought menus and given a few minutes to figure out our order. Thankfully, Ajisen is the kind place with a very visual menu. There is nearly one photo for every item, making ordering a breeze.

The white broth that comes with most noodle bowls is the house specialty here, so most of us go that route.

The quickly-served order went a little something like this:

Japanese Dumplings: Essentially, pan-fried pork and chive dumplings. The filling stood out as very fresh tasting and plentiful. No hollow dumplings here. $3.99

Crab Maki: I didn't taste 'em as I'm not a maki fan, but they looked fantastic and they were promptly inhaled by their owner. No complaints from him. $4.25

Assorted Vegetables Ramen: A few different kinds of Asian mushrooms, along with green cabbage, carrot, corn and chives over a bowl of ramen noodles in Ajisen's special white broth. This was my pick and I loved it. The broth is definitely great and the noodles were nicely cooked -- not soggy or knotted up. No cheapy button mushrooms either... really nice stuff. $6.75-$7.99

Fried Chicken Ramen: First thing done right: the chicken wasn't fried and then dropped into the broth to soak. It came on the side with some sauce and mayo which was a nice touch. The chicken was boneless and the actual ramen bowl was nice 'n' simple, dressed only with cabbage and chives. Dharm, who ordered this one, noted that he'd pass on the cabbage next time. Tasty, but not for everyone. $7.25

Ajisen Spicy Pork Ramen(pictured at the top): This final dish proved to be the most memorable. Georgia, who ordered it, loves seriously spicy food, so when the server asked if she wanted either mild or very spicy, she didn't miss a beat with her "SPICY!" reply. He warned that it was very spicy and joked that he didn't want her wasting his noodles if she couldn't hack it. She scoffed at his remark and told him to bring it on.

It was really really spicy. So spicy, that her eyes not only watered but grew noticeably bloodshot. We tried diluting it with some of the regular broth, but not before she had reached over for Dharm's mayonnaise and used it as an ointment on her burning lips. That's a photo I won't be posting! Approach this one with caution! $6.95

Oh, and there was one more thing. Partly to try it and partly to help Geo, I ordered up a strawberry green bubble tea. For me, the key to giving bubble tea a thumbs up is whether or not the tapioca is great or absolutely gross. There is really no in-between.

Ajisen? GREAT.
(Also not too bad for easing a spice victim's tongue.)

--Ajisen Ramen - 5229 Yonge St., South of Finch. (416) 223-0618(Another location is open in Markham, just North of Steeles and Warden)

I really like the ramen with the white pork bone broth base.. Nice noodle consistency, with the right amount of chewiness!
However, I must complain about the service. The servers barely said a word and treated us rudely. They wouldn't respond even when we said thank you..
We were a bit bothered by the atmosphere because they constantly played gospel/evangelical music on the background... -__-

Not to belittle your unhappiness, but a lot of asian places are focused on efficiency. Verbal courtsey isn't a part of the operation - don't take it personally. Go for the good, cheap food, not the service.

If you compare to the Ramen you make with ' just add water and microwave', Ajisen isn't bad. If you don't want more than spaghetti noodle (yes Italian spaghetti) in grocery store broth, generic seasoning, and a spoon full of meat/veggies...Go to Ajisen for a cheap meal ($10 will get you more carbs than McDs).

Vegetarian option (for wifey) was weak, but the only notable veggie Ramen I could find. I recommend the veggies stick to Pho...you can't fake Ramen.

I had the pork Ramen and spicy chicken wings. Chicken wings were plain, small and 'spiced' with *continental Thai chilli sauce...and my Ramen was barely worth the $9.